A family of seven, including five young children, died on a remote Oregon road in a head-on collision on their way to an end-of-summer vacation in Las Vegas, a family member said Wednesday.Erika Carter Boquet, 29, was driving her 2016 Toyota 4 Runner eastbound on Oregon Highway 78 when an oncoming vehicle veered into her lane, authorities said.Boquet, of Tacoma, Washington, and her children Isabella, 11; Elisabeth, 8; and Tytis, 6, were killed, Boquet’s brother, Jesse Tate, told The Associated Press.Another relative and her two children also perished in the Monday crash. Tate declined to name them because of the wishes of their immediate family.“It’s a tragedy I wouldn’t wish on anyone else,” Tate, 30, of Spanaway, Washington, told The Oregonian/OregonLive in an earlier interview.Oregon State Police listed the other victims as Kyla Marie Brown, 28; Arianna Marie Brown, 10; and 2-year-old Xavier King Johnson. Authorities did not provide details about the relationships between the victims.The driver and sole occupant of the other car, 48-year-old Mark Robert Rundell, of Prairie City, Oregon, also died.The crash happened in a remote part of Oregon, about 130 miles west of the Idaho border.Tate first learned of it from relatives who contacted him on social media. He then called his father, who told him who was involved, he said.Boquet volunteered at a Tacoma-based nonprofit she created called Last Stop that provides resources to low-income families.The group hosted an Easter egg hunt earlier this year, Tate said, and Boquet hoped to have a backpack drive before the school year began. She aimed to one day build a park in Tacoma.“She was outgoing, personable, made friends everywhere she went, and her kids took after her,” Tate said. “They all just cared about everyone around them.”Frank Williams, Erika Boquet's grandfather, remembered her as a "beautiful person." “She’s a beautiful person with three beautiful kids she was raising. She was doing all she could to raise not only her kids but help the entire community of Tacoma,” Williams told Q13.“It’s hard to fathom,” he added. “All I can say is she loved life and she loved people."A few hundred people gathered at a park in Tacoma Wednesday to remember the victims. "It makes it hard because I want to question it, but I can't questions this. I can't question this," family member Louis Johnson said. "I watched them build and grow and be great women and great kids."A GoFundMe page to help bring the bodies home and pay funeral costs had raised more than double its goal of $10,000 on Wednesday.

PORTLAND, Ore. —

A family of seven, including five young children, died on a remote Oregon road in a head-on collision on their way to an end-of-summer vacation in Las Vegas, a family member said Wednesday.

Another relative and her two children also perished in the Monday crash. Tate declined to name them because of the wishes of their immediate family.

“It’s a tragedy I wouldn’t wish on anyone else,” Tate, 30, of Spanaway, Washington, told The Oregonian/OregonLive in an earlier interview.

Oregon State Police listed the other victims as Kyla Marie Brown, 28; Arianna Marie Brown, 10; and 2-year-old Xavier King Johnson. Authorities did not provide details about the relationships between the victims.

The driver and sole occupant of the other car, 48-year-old Mark Robert Rundell, of Prairie City, Oregon, also died.

The crash happened in a remote part of Oregon, about 130 miles west of the Idaho border.

Tate first learned of it from relatives who contacted him on social media. He then called his father, who told him who was involved, he said.

Boquet volunteered at a Tacoma-based nonprofit she created called Last Stop that provides resources to low-income families.

The group hosted an Easter egg hunt earlier this year, Tate said, and Boquet hoped to have a backpack drive before the school year began. She aimed to one day build a park in Tacoma.

“She was outgoing, personable, made friends everywhere she went, and her kids took after her,” Tate said. “They all just cared about everyone around them.”

“She’s a beautiful person with three beautiful kids she was raising. She was doing all she could to raise not only her kids but help the entire community of Tacoma,” Williams told Q13.

“It’s hard to fathom,” he added. “All I can say is she loved life and she loved people."

A few hundred people gathered at a park in Tacoma Wednesday to remember the victims.

"It makes it hard because I want to question it, but I can't questions this. I can't question this," family member Louis Johnson said. "I watched them build and grow and be great women and great kids."

A GoFundMe page to help bring the bodies home and pay funeral costs had raised more than double its goal of $10,000 on Wednesday.